명상도서관

명상도서관

Is emotion regulation the process underlying the relationship between low mindfulness and psychosocial distress? 자세히보기
  • 자료유형학술지논문
  • 저자명Pepping, C.A.,O Donovan, A.,ZimmerGembeck, M.J.,Hanisch, M.
  • 학회/출판사/기관명Wiley-Blackwell
  • 출판년도2014
  • 언어영어
  • 학술지명/학위논문주기Australian journal of psychology
  • 발행사항Vol.66No.2[2014]_x000D_
  • ISBN/ISSN0004-9530
  • 소개/요약Emotion regulation deficits are implicated in many forms of psychosocial distress. The aim of the present research was to investigate whether emotion regulation was the process underlying the well-established association between low dispositional mindfulness and greater psychosocial distress. Two studies are presented that examined whether non-acceptance of emotion and limited access to emotion regulation strategies were the processes underlying the association between low mindfulness and depression, anxiety, stress, general psychological symptoms, interpersonal distress, and social role difficulties in a student sample (Study 1) and a clinical sample (Study 2). In Study 1, there were indirect effects of mindfulness and symptom distress, depression, anxiety, stress, and social role difficulties through non-acceptance of emotions. There were indirect associations between mindfulness and symptom distress, interpersonal distress, social role difficulties, depression, anxiety, and stress through lack of access to emotion regulation strategies. In Study 2, there were indirect associations between mindfulness and psychological symptom distress, interpersonal distress, depression, anxiety, and stress through lack of access to emotion regulation strategies. In brief, emotion regulation difficulties are, at least in part, the process underlying the association of low dispositional mindfulness and psychosocial distress.